Eastern reflector, 3 February 1897


[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]





JOB
is pr
pared to do all .
of this
NEATLY,
and
FINEST STYLE.
Plenty of new mate-
rial and the best J- V U L.
of
Eastern Reflector
D. J. Editor and Owner
TRUTH IN N
per Year, m Advance.
PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1897.
NO
C TOBACCO.
III
ram a
i lot o
mid
WE PAY
A f Scan a
n Mr j. J n a. i t s lo
.-. -1 . rules we find
I . t , ; . i; deal I vi i.-1 . and
j .; i . he ;
vi Ki fit I
Tree f all
anyone a line
e will mall to
Illustrate en a-
tor Mi i m It contains
Lace -t Lamps
s, J
save trading
the a pay-
meal our .
a postal n
.-SUIT.
Dines v Sm
Baltimore, Md.
ILLS
In all
special
e Court.
Hi
H. W-
I A
to Latham Skinner.
A -I
. .;. .-j
W G v. B. F.
Sn ill. If. C. N. C.
TYSON,
Greenville, X. C
Practice in all the
n. Jambs,
1ST
N- C,
over J.
Cobb A Son's
John E. C. II
Wilson, X.
attention to
an of calms.
Loans m- on short time.
X.
have he privilege if giving
convention through this
idea , I the industry North
Until v. i-;. year nothing
much had i been said
a as a I. I pi i
Nearly .-very
; Its In
laugh him In
Carolina h a . in l
In r
baa bin known a lb pine
. i-l i
to av w a -r Slate
I i
bi
kn r i- hi
her i baa been com-
pared to -nil a
em in excelled o the
your i w U
Florida. Her tobacco
which it me to
arc r in
other van- in our Union,
g as d. Iron
nous the All. y.-e in in
lo the mid reeled
am happy an i
given me to present my I a,
aim regret It could h .- .
done, a t
in
ill. to ll-
I ii- tint
reticle
pen t
row in Stale
n .
-ll
tin. . I . Convention
n- a tobacco p-e
in North a a the
i- v
No U i
and .-t i and p
ugh the .
S tin- Indian is
j r or . s Kr.-m
i par.- i Ii p . V
f Ii Ill .- A. lo
. Id a i. in
alluvial ad . lid I
ii I . Ii. l. i ii . mi .
A is
in i ii
i I . . . .- I Ii. u I
. I i . .
I., in n by the
i Co.,
r. d d
d. ll. , i I North
Carolina, ii per of c-
grown No lit Carolina is used in
ll
true I do i s
per cent,
the tobacco in
and n tin
slate i. us. tin. purpose,
I not id per went id it it.
and i by American
both i I i- ma. a-
r. I in i. ii percent-
s . .
. n cent, e
win.-. s.
is in i e
gel o. a . inn.
1-- in Denis a pound. Tin remain.
hi i
To the
CAROLINA Ii
I r
-V S u f
Highest of all in Leavening
Two Papers for
ac-
Reflector anti
North the
above amount.
year and you
should take the two
leading papers.
I Repeat
Of
ii
ii I i lo
s ii -N
mi lie an
ill- hi I handbook.
prepared by T. K. bi
la-
I., i ii. Unlike
this work
i a Pop-
I. widely read. It, n
PUKE
cf-
Our have never
i have never ceased to the bet
selected
i . ii xi, it is
W. II.
. Greenville, N. t
X.
LONG
D and I at law.
T .
Practices in all Ci-u ts.
This
will he five
u -1 in
this year. do
Hie P on April
o. the of will be
Iowa,
s Ohio Tut
tn this
aid is year in
Ion a two
and in four years.
Hew York would have
Governor if old
had been bur j
the new instrument j
term is tied
three to two Got.
Morton, who was elected in
the first to
y the for the briefer
Journal.
; tin- y am
k. and i-l
In fact, win i
nailer bis colony i An
in 1584 tin eastern of
i found
a plant
from ibis early period in
the State's r. to lime to-
hi- on.
c. i-. in. Old
N. in and a very
. ii tobacco pro-
an I
is i- cat green o.-
. ii
ii a i
Height or i.
, ii N . Carolina
produce b -d l tobacco a
i ca i- in man
i and good
w in.
a of course n
some good cutters
but thing like i tab
sin The main for
m s . lo a. is to a
s. In mis
nine if it i n us
in in I tin work
. n i n of k
pined t. Col. J.
in i in h
, urn ion i
ii M. . i ll u CO
H . I I if i I ,
I. Si, . . I ;
; i S. .
i nit Ci
ii ii i; I . y. in-
on Inn Dr. II.
, of
ho Co-
j a i i.
But , .
from which to select your
confidently believe and
tour, is the store of all stores n
from which to buy your goods hi
North Carolina n ; -.-. u
your ii r the
coming year. are sold on tune at close
credit prices to customers approved credit.
Goods sold for cash at that tell of the
wonderful influence of gold, silver or greens-
When y inter into our possession
they are again into the best
gains fir the of our
friends and customers. Do not or .
ed away but cone straight back to your
who will cue your interests
and work the harder to you
stronger customer better friend of
honest dealing between man
and man. We are the friend of tie; p or
man, we are the friend of the rich man, we
are friends you all to see us, we
will serve you to the best i our ability. Po-
lite st of -service and honest el-
fort shall be -ours to command at the
book is not tine
out d i , u
No
i- i i router variety of
i, than
more
u d I is,
i r-, material
ii . ii In, ii ilia d by
i.,
i in first lei U,
vi i.
by on
I'M.
ii ii is
. null ill ll
S a par i i
u. a heroic i. o
civil w i Nell f a d.-
if I ii
ii and the
plain, et, flora,
, I C II, I
S, I I , ll-j
New the .-en
conferences might
learn ancient
In Brat place, build
ins were all more or leas re
ii is t., bear it mi d
there was no jerry
Tin mortar laid
In i, not allowed to rotten Brat,
mis the ease with and their
tearing rial was m strong and
that it a
f great many of tint it
have into
water supply mi in
the matter of a
m- st i f of
the and outside the boas.
The Roman at
show a and perfect
t-m I arterial
1,700 years ago in of
England, they
en in matter to do much
the that -i-r
is new ii. in sending tier
by a el arterial
don to lower of Mi r-
water was exceed-
well organized, and never
they bring the
the city or a villa They
sin wells s lo the i-i
and well acquainted
artificial m.-l o la of
water. method heating their
was moat
be a healing
i in b I Lorn a
r of flues radiated through
given to the
lo Hit- present el
export i i the product direct
ports and shipped as
yet ii i a most important and
p pr.-
duet of tin While object
paper is not lo compare tobacco
I i- i
ii.-- tobacco other State,
i, i not amiss to slat, here
lo tobacco that net
unto the few years
world the aces were
such a as Carolina
The demand for bright
u from
probably
iii JO per el the tobacco thus
as North C tobacco it
was d and known Vi
and hence by this one
i leading of the Slate and
is probably today attracting
ion than any
has a. me until
during the la decade and through the
and
E. barman, editor the
Southern of Winston,
N. , a few oilier ,
State been math
known tn- lime i not far distant
when Carolina bright will In-
as they are by tar,
of the ii
any Other State in Hie
industry United
States is a great and varied one. Unlike
lb , in.,, is not likely I
market
with the trade demand,
are baldly two Slates in I
that produce the same Bind
and there fa, be-
ii St I--. bile it i all
tin- n-
v is .- . land that pro-
s i not ;
o i. an I vice ram
i in- ii. in the cigarette tobacco
eastern and North
t is i. in texture
N Carolina there
in very v, the sun,
I -.-. in J inly silica
which ii a while in
Carolina there is very
mineral matter the soil and the
i and kid glove like.
North L win be very
into distinct
gr s.
i i produce
largely The Pied-
i produces tie and
rich plug. u-e
termed the r pro-
cigarette ii is
The process of plain lands
the tobacco the lorn
ping, curing d preparation
i t is much same through-
out only in mode
application while the principal is the
The preparation of plant
and is begun In and can lie
done any lime from
lime till the mi Idle of A
thorough preparation of the soil is es-
neat
crop if tobacco. This is done by
working land mid then bar
rowing. The rows are d of three
a a ball feet apart, at
eight hundred
pounds to , and w other ma-
dial may he used, is pal in and
then the I arrows are listed the middle
is opened the land is then ready
t. The plants
Store.
1.8.
in a y
and quite in us n any
u--, vet enough lo prevent
oil m April 20th to middle of May
an,; the cm lie
-i. instance, m the
they
July Sept.
t.
ewes wry u ,.,., that
yet c . .,
w cigar tobacco grown in arrange M as to give
In ha and in j when The is
. i ii, i produce a
when
cut Iron , taken to
to .,. kind that enters inn. j o B-e . o;
i With
six hundred
of North. j w
compelled to view the is in
, i
till ii
t -II
. ti nil
i-. the act inn
h lore The
the core is e
tired lo rein
e in, into n S-- ii. op
which taken from III
grades are i-
and color a-id when ready for
are sold I. en a war ,. i .-.-
ll is frequently remarked now
industry I C
is on the wane, o however
all farm products ii has pi
value during the
years, but so long us boys continue lo
be raised will smoke
and so long will the u-
continue in
tie
Mr. B. B line e, of
a., ha had eon
Up In ill-. Ml n I
in that
procure tried all cough r.
he hear of. sot no
. i i an
a I I I
,, go a on in
c o be on
d the v . a
sin pot . go i ill i
., i ii . is i p a d
h . be i
.-in . i-r lie
nine i
i l g i iV
ii en lone in folio r-
n ii- not iv iii living
I with f hi ii
i ed v. d i . i
iii grocer, an I
.-,. k no would i-
u. I i f -.-.
mi one . ml I I k medicine.
o i when we s
a train it ii
,. . i- t-
i. car builder, car coup
ll. I I , nil o
in., I.-,
. , facilities
a i lit c. ti ii o.
I, . In I
of
i Ii developed.
N i n c , i
tobacco, rice,
in. , tuck,
. limber, i
pare
mills are a largo grow-
. too
ct are
color Prosperity
. now la the
is exertion morn nobly re
i IN.
l-V , sou of u well
track ii
I witch an and v i u n
l I to at family table, a a
rail M w I
proven fume and of f
., i- w i
. in i he
. bin
t Iii
II. Ill
u. ------j
night sitting a yet the
t-. try Ur. Kl N. -w h been Iron to i o i-
men ride i rd, I I boo
to and pr n ,, ,. , of in
King's New Discovery is
remedy ever . us has don
slid curd u-e Of
m e,
tin i
it Ii -in ft M .
am but Judge.
much bin.
Dr. New l
I t. Coughs, olds
null, ll fail.
free at Join L. Wooten's Di
Her
Schools.
i-l I. iii. in-1 mo . r
is u. it n
a,. . an. bone t; are
Our confidence man la
i inch member
atom into bib, of
the i 1- i Our
con ii I
To show bow far behind North Car- n n ah I n sup
Una lain the matter public schools; f a day
. , . u. t- i
we can compare its b ,,,., the
of ether Slates, The aver- and n them We
age d school i all tin ., , b. if it l b
children of North Carolina i in be
The schools run tram to four go, v., ,, be i- old be
. , in it.
bat many attend only pan -i ,
the time and a many
do not attend all. I'm baa gone wrong
the so tow. The average
lo ti I
id lair
can e i
r ma
ad.
con in
the country
types that are produced,
and looking at it from Ibis light the
observer i- to the
i governed by proper
and laws of trade
United States is a per-
days . ,.,. . p j
ail the the United Mates is word
ire States ti world m n. An
a three than man i- the
North there are over and
, v ,, . lie., bull-
a showing twice good. North.
Carolina is next to last M the
avenue. These facts that
. IS. use-. Bores, salt
cannot he denied, it is mm ff Tatter, Chapped
h-I point CW Wains, all akin
i is snob all tor the in- and cure. es or no
, . , . . r. It is
avenue of to u.
p. Santa per box. of
John L.
to get ii temperature in the Lam a low
I degrees above the normal temperature
atmosphere outside
The process curing varies accord-
to con of plant and
lea I or be
,. -j i lea I -i i V
, hi . -I. ii ii
d painfully
in In- It in of your i-l.
. ii ii d.
t lo ed tall
;., urn f. i m gab i
k. . It's my
a i blown
A. toe youth f into
the d bis beau
the lit lamp post.
i land Plain r-
if of a K
and
arising among lira
h it. baa been much
to of
division ard whether there,
in- operation hereafter
U and the
ii i i
have boon
i. ii ins issued, reg.
endeavoring to the
to decide which
f the would
with. The
n i decide the matter,
night the
lists and
adopted f
Tl
bus lo
us an answer to our request
; in i contract of
as
have bold
a to our mat,
in it caucus reaffirm
, last
too iii a by i
id bud broken.
last summer
ii. lore ill cations
tins caucus
to and ail other
resolutions night bu
in, i are
Alls ad ll
was a lull attendance
in The caucus issued
address of some words to
the populist i-iii in North Cir
States Li
oho
s a d lust weak. The
in. i oilier .
election of
candidate Henna, Sherman
Wall Trent In the
s v. i of North Carolina
I-. iii States Senate is a
ii o every patriot of
Si lie, as will as the nation. Al-
ready the populist supporters
man begin to call
s populists,
in truth, are nothing
while attempting
to the purposes
republicans by masquerading us
traits ye
shall know
only way by which
populist patty cum be able to main-
existence, strengthen its
and advance principles,
upon which good government
must founded, is by purging
from all who
crime f placing
above the welfare of the people-
H of
o c ll,. g lies
under traitorous of
Congressman Harry r,
aided and by prominent
of other high in
councils f party, hive
com alt led this
been promptly and
expelled the u
branded
to basis of good
given men and o i he
w Hare human Tl. due
,,;, tun snakes fusion
ll. bis personal
gloated over tho
of and boasted
that the republicans, would
by 1900 every
i worth
The boasting bops the
pan in North Carolina
no doubt, a else-
where in the hope and purpose
of tho democratic party against
continued of our
life, but we bays not
upon the of political
action an food to prolong tho life
old patties
address wan i. . m .
conference of Butler, Thompson,
Aver and
Court to
reader ma t
hate during past week
a feature of new, was
lynchings all over country, fas
of It has I
in ibis country.
are not any par.
section, are
from ever. Slate.
when a lynching read
will, horror. It i now not ail
to And two mi re
in a single i -n. a daily
pup.
Increase in lynchings i- due to
increase in crime,
tin
courts, Bearing the
cause named, ii is maintained by Judge
Parker, Unit I Slates
for w of
lie- coins- of an article in the
American there
have been
in United Slabs dining the hist six
years. In same time there have
legal executions and
lynching, year the in
Ibis country reached total
or per month. By way
ii may be on
lint
i i daring
United or s-r
month. committed In
this country by average
IS a month.
That tin is a met deplorable stale
cannot be denied,
dear that remedy i-. to be found
iii Courts. A i immediate
and radical reform In
ii, certain and just
would r-
only in cheeking
but eventually
Observer.
blush-
i t
you or appeared at wit-
in i Mill In
ton g W In BX-
s i,. f.
. y. , IS h ate
y i i ha suit it
W. in H more c in
was a BUn's v ,.
down t. dim
a with bu. to
Judi e
baa no doubt i lock its
i, y tor or less depth
in ,, in of
,, , , .-. , ., in many
i this purging
n. i be done. It cannot began
, Kl i.
,, ii; i; ion
m m i i- i on. d by f
a, i poi -1
can ii in south swinging
party to extreme
democratic West
swinging party to the other
extreme, which not only d
harmony unity mot In-d,
end angering every xis-
They co-
. i i with own
. e in. with a to
o r disruption ab-
Only week
Senator .
. action by n bolting of
puny, The
Even It Not
My follow not in the foot-
stops of a loafer, no
him who is born
for verily. say unto you,
is Overstocked Heats
the are all
tho whittling nieces arc all
It la boiler lo saw at
I y bu a e nil m to whittle in
a loafing mat el. and
My SOU i ll ill
bast loft thy of
a jay bird, break from
cigarette habit, thy breath
u factory, and
illy i i, is loss in-
a atom dummy.
News.
to Know,
It may It- Worth lo know- tint Hie
very best for restoring the
nervous i r
is Bitters.
in vegetable, giving
toe e In the tom-
i gently lbs Liver and
K aids these In
lb , lug In blond.
Kl I i Hitters improves the appetite.
is by
a in have tried It an very bast
. serve tonic. Try
s hi . par bottle at
J,. h o . bin ; -lore.
nor
o. rial, lid
A. elected as a
nil the cum
ho on.-. Now he allow
MS p to call MM a Republican,
lie has appointed I. a
It n hi. clerk at
It look, very much a some
the seeds labeled which
were pin market
summer, are not what they were
represented IS





THE REFLECTOR.
. Greenville, N. C.
J.
Entered at the post at
C, m matter.
LEGISLATURE.
Reporter Proceeding.
SENATE.
o'clock after-
noon.
The bill favorably reported
.-unending law go as to add
words the wife
then the hue also
and to add words the husband
remarries then the wife may also re-
. Bills as follows
Person, to establish and maintain an
and consolidate
the insurance ,
to authorize the governor
to
any
i i . i. i or
; also to suppress and
to recover damages fa- lynching.
Barker, Randolph, to pay a
against university.
Butler, requiring county commission
appoint the time and place
sales process of law.
Tho bill came up to make two years
desertion u legal ground fur divorce
and to give either party the right to
remarry.
HOUSE.
The house met at o'clock.
The following bills and resolutions
were
tartness, to prescribe the liabilities
of railways by providing that any em-
of a railway who is injured r
the representative of any person killed
in a railway accident during his
vice, by the negligence or
of any employee or by any de-
in shall be entitled to
maintain an action against such rail-
way, and that any contract or agree-
expressed or implied, n by
any of n railway to waive the
benefit of the above shall be null and
void.
Lusk, to allow administrators,
guardians, assignees and
.-.; in charge premiums security
the ends
of be promoted by such ad-
their terms t end the
first Monday in December 1898 for
appointed and those for each
term shall begin on the date
above given. Wherever the governor
thus appoints justices one shall be of a
political party different from that of the
majority of the justices in said township,
and such appointment of additional
be made by the governor
the resident judge certifies it
to require the registration of
the names partners in business con-
Anderson, to strike out the section
lass acts of 1887, and include in
the list of benevolent societies exempt
from insurance tax -Knights
and the Indemnity Com-
.
There was some discussion of the
bill to incorporate the town of Bridgers-
Wilson county.
Butler mid there was a bad habit o
incorporating these cross roads towns
o as to exempt people living in the
limits from road duty and allow the
j of whiskey.
HOUSE.
. . The House was called to order M
o'clock, Speaker in the chair.
Among the bills introduced were
these.
to regulate assignments, by
providing sales, as-
mortgagee or deeds of trust
which are executed to secure any debt,
obligation, note or bond which gives
preferences to any creditor the maker
shall be absolutely void as to
creditors.
to amend The Code so as
to allow grandchildren certain ex-
laves to inherit and become
tors of their estates.
Cook, to prevent affrays ; to
and to amend The Code in
reference to Sunday trains.
to authorize clerks of criminal
courts to probate deeds and take
private examination of married
men.
Cathey, a resolution urging the pros-
congress to require the election of
United States senators by the direct
vote of the people.
Dockery, to charter the Eastern hos-
tor at and to
provide tor the of the in-
sane.
Harris, to levy a special tax in
Peace, to provide that the land owner
shall pay one-fourth of the fertilizers
tenants, unless when me land
is rented he tells the leaf he will not
pay for any fertilizers.
Brown, providing that boards
shall appoint on
Ho first Mot day hi April each year
township road to have
charge all road work and to be paid
for their tone.
Hat, to relieve from taxes 1896
those persons whose property was b urn
ed at
companies to the the sum
to-exceed per cent, per annum on the
amount of such bonds.
Hodges, to permit fishing with rod
nett in and Tar livers.
Person, of Wilson, to incorporate
Saratoga, Wilson county.
Lusk, to have county commissioners
designate a depository to protect th e
public funds in the hands of public
Carter, to mat no man,
man or child shall be employed in any
manufacturing establishment for a
longer time than ten hours a day,
less the purpose of making
repairs, this to apply to establish
which employ over five persons,
the violation of this act to be a
and the penalty a fine of not
less Until
Craven, appropriating a sum for a
dormitory boys at the institution for
the white blind.
Bryant, to the Chatham
Traction Company.
Sutton, of Cumberland, to amend
the charter of the and Al-
railway.
Peace, to strike out the provision
for two additional justices of the
peace.
The bill to amend the charter cf
Trinity by taking from the
dent body powers of govern-
and these in the hands
cf the trustees, passed its readings.
The resolution inviting Boy Stone,
of the United States agricultural de-
to address the the
evening February 5th on the subject
of good roads was adopted.
The bill passed to special
men for attendance at capital cases,
but no mileage, the bill applying to
counties, including
Moore, Beaufort, and Bertie.
NINETEENTH
SENATE.
The senate was called to order by
Clerk Patterson at o'clock,
ant Governor Reynolds not having
rived from Chapel Hill.
On motion Ray, was
culled to the chair.
On motion of the senate ad-
at o'clock. No business
was done.
HOUSE.
The house met at o'clock. Only
forty members were present.
A bill was introduced by Lusk to
authorize the governor to appoint
male notaries public
The following third rending
Resolution asking congress to rebuild
the United States arsenal at
ville.
The bill to amend the section of the
code relating to appeals from assign-
widows years support.
The bill to amend the lynch law
came up. It increases the and
penalties for those who break into
on houses the of Knelling.
Sutton, of Cumberland, said the sec-
providing that the county shall be
I responsible to the amount
Ransom, to change the age when to representatives persons lynch-
ed had b--en stricken out by the com-
Mr. said he thought the
present law amply sufficient, and
thought the bill had a look of danger to
be passed now so precipitately.
The bill was put on its
ed the second reading, and the third
reading being objected to by Mr.
House adjourned.
road duty begin from to
. The bill to allow women a divorce if
their husbands are in the penitentiary
was tabled.
At in compliance with the is-
Dr. Curry, agent of the Pea-
body fund, addressed the legislature in
the hall of the house. The subject
the address was This
was the third time he had been invited
o address the legislature.
-EIGHTEENTH
SENATE.
Lieutenant-Governor Reynolds called
the Senate to order at noon.
Bills and resolutions were introduced
as follows
Parker, Randolph, to amend the
of the Asheboro and
railroad
Lyon, to amend the charter of Dur-
ham.
Cannon, to reduce present rates cf
on Cape Fear bar and river.
to incorporate the Bank of
Greenville.
Person, colored, to pension all ex
or any franking privileges of railroads,
or
Clark, to levy a special tax to build
a bridge over Roanoke river, in all-
in x and Northampton counties.
Henderson, to establish the
law in Vance county.
Alexander, to incorporate the Color-
ed People's Benevolent and Relief As-
Sharp, to incorporate in
Wilson county.
Ramsay, in favor of livery stable
proprietors, giving them the right to
hold stock until is paid.
The unfinished business was taken
up, being the bill to amend the divorce
law.
An amendment was offered by Sena-
tor Anthony, to make general the law
which was enacted in 1895 to
one person in Wayne county.
Senator Butler offered a
to repeal the entire law.
Senator took ground in favor of
the amendments saying there was no
danger North Carolina becoming a
Dakota or Oklahoma as no foreigner
had come to this seeking divorce
since law had beer in effect.
Senator Butler's substitute passed
second reading.
Senator ottered M an
sent to the substitute, both par-
ties to any action, when divorce has
been granted under the provisions of
chapter acts 1895, be and they arc
hereby permitted marry again
the lifetime the other
A roll call was demanded and
; noes
Senator offered an amendment
to the substitute of Senator Butler
chapter acts 1895, which is
repealed by this act, remain in force
with to all actions heretofore
begun under its provisions and now
pending in the courts this state
adopted, ayes, j noes,
Senator Butter's
passed its third reading. It re-
peals the act 1895 relating to divorce
two desertion, but gives the
parties who have heretofore secured
divorce the right to marry again.
HOUSE.
The house met at o'clock.
BILLS INTRODUCED.
Drew to punish wife beaters,
that justices of the peace who try
such persons shall summon a jury of
six taxpayers and if convicted the
offender, shall receive thirty-nine lashes
on the first offense, with ten additional
or each subsequent offense, and that he
pay all costs.
The bill Sutton, Cumberland,
to provide better protection for rail and
ship passengers was taken up.
It was unfavorably reported by the
judiciary committee. There was also a
minority report in the bill. It
clothed railway officials wit l full power
to make arrests of persons who com-
any offense, or behave improperly
on trains ; that companies shall be liable
all damages to baggage or freights
that railways shall liable tor damage
to any passenger who has paid lure for
any failure to make connection accord-
to their published schedules, and
it shall be presumed that such
is due to the company's
any violation of this act to be a
misdemeanor, punishable by a fine or
imprisonment.
Cunningham offered an amendment
striking out all of tho bill save that
part regarding damage to baggage.
Sutton demanded the yeas an
on Cunningham's amendment. The
vote ; nays, ; the
amendment was adopted.
Hancock introduced a bill to restore
to the state control and management of
the Atlantic and North Carolina rail-
way and a bill to allow Craven county
commissioners to hold an election to
build bridges across Trent and
rivers, and if the people vote in favor
of the measure to allow issue
in bonds and U levy a special
tax to pay these not to exceed cents
on the
By leave Pearson a bill to
incorporate the Fire
Insurance Company Wilmington. It
gives the company the right to be
either mutual and in-
life if desired.
bill to charter the Carolina
Cooperage Company, of Wilmington, an
allow it to have branches
ville and other places passed. The
charter is n broad and sonic
to it was made.
TWENTIETH
SENATE.
The Senate nut at o'clock.
Bills and resolutions were introduced
as fellows
Alexander, repealing the purchase
so as to prevent paying tax twice
on the same foods.
Clark, to repeal act requiring thirty
notice before enacting a private
prohibitory law.
Grant, to extend stock law in
Clark, to prohibit free passes, so
that no public officer or person elected
to public office directly or
ask, demand, receive or consent
, -p
who did sen ice for the cooled- to free or
TWENTY-FIRST DAY.
SENATE-
The senate met at o'clock.
Bills and resolutions were
as
authorizing the appointment
of tax collectors.
of Randolph, to prevent in
and dissemination of danger-
insects.
that no company or corK-
shall catch fish by seine or net in
any water of the state without first ob-
a annual license from the
treasurer.
Early, to prevent fishing with nets in
Albemarle sound rivers emptying
therein.
Alexander, to impose a fine not ex-
or imprisonment not more
than thirty days en tramps and v i
The special order was taken up, be-
the following
Resolved, by the senate, the house
of representative concurring. That our
tors and representatives in con-
be and are hereby instructed
upon and at every
to vote for free unlimited
coinage of silver at the ratio of to
independent of any international agree-
whether the same be in the
of an independent be at-
as a rider to any bill or species
legislation.
Butler offered the following
Section That our senators be in-
and our representatives re-
quested to use every honorable and
law effort to not only secure free
and unlimited coinage of both gold and
silver, without waiting for consent
of any foreign country, but also to f
increase the amount legal ten-
sufficient to meet the needs of our
increasing population and business and
to abolish the national banking system,
and to have the government, issue all
money and currency, as
provides and requires, and to
vent discrimination against any of the
various kinds lA lawful money in
States, and to prevent the re.
tiring greenbacks.
Sec To prevent
being given to monopolies and trusts
and to lake away from every person or
corporation any special
franchises or subsidies which
have or may tend to create monopolies
or trusts.
Sec To prevent the passage of the
bill now before congress known as the
Funding bill or any
to fund or extend the debts of
the railroads and to have the
government foreclose its mortgage on
these and to take charge and
operate them.
Sec. To secure the establishment
of postal telegraph and sys-
also government postal savings
bunks.
tine. To check and prevent danger-
extension and usurpation cf powers
by the executive and federal judiciary
not granted by the constitution.
Sec To secure the adoption a
graduated or any meas-
to equalize taxation place upon
the wealthy its share and burden of
taxation.
On the call Butler's substitute
passed its third reading.
HOUSE.
At o'clock the house met.
BILLS AND RESOLUTIONS.
Pool, to appropriate to
colored fair at Elizabeth City.
Sutton, of to add that
county to the eastern criminal circuit.
Young, to create the office public
printer ; to let to the lowest responsible
-r all printings and binding ; may
let it to different persons ; the salary to
be the term of Bee four years,
appointment to be by the governor.
button, of Cumberland, to the
governor to convene courts in
great emergencies.
Sutton, of New a
resolution providing for th; impeach-
Judge Norwood-
Following is the text of tho
and articles of impeachment
Resolved, That house of
of the Suite of North Caro-
inn exhibits and propounds to the
honorable senate of North Carolina
this impeachment against Honorable
William L. Norwood, judge of the
court for the Twelfth dis-
of North Carolina, and pr
and alleges;
That said Norwood, judge
of the superior court as aforesaid, hath
been, and yet continue to be,
guilty of while
holding his office as aforesaid.
Article That said Norwood, while
engaged in the exercise his office,
been intoxicated and thereby
incapable and incompetent to
properly exercise and perform the duties
of the same
Arrive That said Norwood while
acting as judge hath been of
in public places, to at
November 1896, at b
September at Lumber on
at spring term, and Rockingham
at pr g term, 1895, and at
Wilmington on or April,
1895.
it is that the
honorable senate take due order in this
behalf and cite said Norwood to appear
at its bar to and for trial ac.
cording to the c and of
Resolved, That the speaker this
house is hereby to appoint a
committee time members of this
house, iii the law, who shall
deliver these of impeachment lo
the the senate and
demand that be token thereon,
and who also shall prosecute this
in behalf of the house ct
representatives and of the of the
state.
The resolution of regarding
information as to of railway
officials over which caused
such heated discussion, came up on
third reading
noes, There was applause at its
passage.
The bill, applying only to Moore
county, to make a misdemeanor for
the owner of poultry to the latter
to upon cultivated grounds
caused much laughter. It d
By Sutton, of Cumberland, in-
a bill to extend equitable and
preventive remedies, Baking it
any person or corporation as plain
tiff to bring notion against any altar
person or corporation as defendant to
or restrain any unlawful injury
or damage or wrong to plaintiff, or to
compel poi any act or deed
to which plaintiff may be lawfully en
titled, and no such action shall be dis
missed or complaint be demurred on
the ground that the plaintiff has
legal remedy. Actions herein
Authorized arc to be subject to all the
laws and rules of as other
actions and writs injunction may is-
sue as ancillary remedies as in other
s and all issues of fact in any
action herein authorized shall be tried
by jury as in other cases.
DAY.
SENATE.
The senate met at o'clock.
Bill an resolutions were introduced
as
to prescribe the terms in
which foreign railroads shall operate in
North Carolina.
Clark, to amend the chatter of En-
field.
Grant, to regulate the sale of liquor,
establish dispensary in Wayne
county.
to the Tar River
and Carolina railway.
to the public school
Early, to the Wellington
and railway.
Bills pass third readings as fol-
lows
To allow the commissioners of Robe-
son to the chain gang.
To reduce the salaries tees so as
to conform to the price of farm pro-
ducts. This bill calls tor a committee
of five to look into the salaries and fees
of officers, so as to reduce them.
The House met at
The on privileges and
submitted a majority and a
minority report in the case
ton against Young from Wake. The
majority report Young, colored,
the sitting member.
Among tho bills and resolutions in-
were the
White, Bertie, to amend the char-
cl Wellington and rail-
way.
Alexander, a resolution appropriating
towards the erection a
of George in Statuary hull in
the capitol Washington.
Currie, to allow the sheriff of Robe-
son Bounty to collect f taxes-
to provide tor graded
at
Lusk, the Tennessee expo-
providing for the purpose of
making an exhibit there, a board
managers be created, composed of the
board of agriculture and nine
other citizens selected by the governor
that the board of agriculture be author-
to make an exhibit and to
this purpose any it may have on
haul or to its credit in the treasury
and to further carry out the provisions
of the act is out
the funds in the treasury and not
otherwise appropriated.
Bills pawed third reading as
To allow Rich to
a special I ix.
To amend the ch of
Savings bunk, of Monroe.
Reed introduced a to so amend
the law regarding tramps and vagrants
as to remove from the
court courts.
The In the blood which
cause scrofulous eruptions are
eradicated by Hood's
m. Try It.
LETTER
Regular
Washington.
The Senate did a wise thing when it
defeated the a offered to the
Military appropriation till
the cost of transportation the
West Point Cadets to ard Wash-
in order that they might be
allowed to appear in the Inauguration
day parade. In the first
tor such a purpose is an
at any time and doubly so
at this time when, as Senator Stewart
pointed out, thousands of our people
are in need of the actual necessities
hie. In the next place, the military
forces the government should not be
allowed to take any part in the
a President. The presence
of the United States troops no doubt
adds to the pleasure of those view
the parade, but all the same they ought
to be there. It is a bad idea, and
the precedent of having a few United
States troops in the parade to give it
variety, which we have been in
this generation, may some day be taken
advantage of by unscrupulous men by
bringing enough of them to Washington
to forcibly inaugurate some man who
has not gone through the formality of
being elected by the people. In my
humble opinion it would be a wise
precaution for Congress to pass a bill
prohibiting armed troops,
state or national, coming inside
the corporate limits Washington on
inauguration day. The inauguration
of a President isn't a function
and the military should have nothing
whatever to do with it.
That arbitration treaty MM not jet
been reported to the Senate the
Committee on Foreign Relations,
notwithstanding the public meeting
showers of telegrams and letters in
its The general Is
that the Committee n d
several amendments to the treaty,
setting forth clearly that it is not to be
allowed lo interfere with our
of the Monroe doctrine.
The house this week passed
bill as reported from the
committee.
Senator Daniel made a speech against
the Nicaragua Canal bill this
opening with this dramatic language
bill is dead. The speech of
Senator killed it, and Minister
Rod bus exposed its corpse in tin-
I die He expressed
as to whether the would
a commercial benefit to the
States it were cons declared
the passage of bill would in
put -the United Slates into the
business. further pointed
oat that alter the
hundred dollars into the canal
the I ii Slates could not maintain
exclusive control over it. Independent
th ; Clayton- treaty between
the United Stales there is
a treat between and
gives the armies and navies
England free access to the canal. The
speech of Senator Daniel was
alter Senator Morgan had introduced
amendments to the Canal bill intended
to meet objections raised by
in behalf of Nicaragua. It is
that
Senator Daniel was whoa he
declared the bill dead.
Some of the Senators appear to have
taken thought the bill
the Provident to appoint
representative to an international
men which it was at
first was to go through just
as i was reported. Senator Cannon
has offered an din-cling tin-
President to a ,
Senator Stewart has offered another,
providing that the United gov
shall, in case the conference
to reach an agreement in favor
of international bimetallism, within
thirty days after the d
the conference open the to the
coinage all gold and silver
he semi official that
has already selected his
friend, William P. Ohio, to
U. S. Marshal of the District
Columbia, has aroused much resent-
among Washington republicans,
who gave liberally their lime and
money to help elect and who
believed that he would live up lo the
home rule plank i the Si Louis plat-
form, notwithstanding a hint dropped
by Mark some ago inti-
mating that the offices in the
District of Columbia be given to
voters instead nun voting residents.
The resentment is as yet quiet, but it
cannot be kept so the
office, with carpet baggers.
Long;
of Is about to And him-
self in the MUM class with Bliss New
York, Who alter having virtually ac-
a Cabinet was com-
by the red hot opposition to
him, to recall his acceptance and try to
h t him-ell down easy by saying it was
on account i I his wile's health.
leaded by Senator
Hour tire en Long, and the
friends every other New England
man who has cabinet hankering are
helping along, an I present indications
are that all tins be too much for
Long and he will WOO b; letting
down easy.
Is by torpid liver, winch prevents
to ferment In
tho Than follow dizziness, headache,
d's
Ii
if not
or Mood Hood's
Pills stimulate the
rouse the liver, con
etc. K cents. SiM ll
The rills to take v, lib a
Pills
To Reflector Readers.
To those of our subscribes
who pay up for the year 1897
within days, or to it new sub-
scriber paying not less than
one year in advance, we will in-
one years subscription to
The and
Home Journal, of Chattanooga,
Tenn. This Journal devoted
lo Health, Home and Farm, is
a page monthly
instructive, elevating.
We hare only a limited
to give away on the above
terms. Don't you wait until
your neighbor comes in and
gets the last one we have left.
If you want to take
of this offer you only have
to pay up your subscription
for this year or get us one new
subscriber for a year.
Those who have already paid
up for the year before this
notice is made will receive the
Health and Home Journal.
Notice to Creditors.
qualified before the
Court Clerk of Pitt county a
Adm of of William
Stokes, deceased, notice is hereby given
to ail persons Indebted t the estate to
make immediate to the under-
signed, all persons having claims
against the estate must present
same tor payment on or before the
day January or this
lie plead in bar of recovery.
This day of January
K. r, STOKES,
of William Stokes.
Notice.
A Co., composed of Jesse
and Chas hive lb s day
by mutual
and wilt no longer continue the
business, and in our final
We a settlement In full
from all I to us as our
Thanking our many
for pat patronage,
very
CHAS COBB.
for.
Hardware,
Tinware,
Farm Implements,
Spokes, Rims, Hubs, Building Materials, Paints,
Oils and Stoves.
Fair Dealings and Honest Goods at Rock
Bottom Prices.
MAIN GREENVILLE. X.
a plan y which Farmers can
CHESTS FREE
. . i m
t vi-hi.-. ,. I-.-i I
. I o., . I
fl
-2
cs g
B S
-I
be
pal
h O
CO
M i i S
J. W. HIGGS,
J. HIGGS,
THE GREENVILLE BANK
STOCKHOLM. b
Capital of More Than Hall W. W
Million Dollars, Greenville, N. C.
Win. T. Dixon, President National
Exchange Bank, Baltimore, Mil. solicit the accounts
The Scotland Neck Bank, Scotland of firms, individuals and the general
Neck, N. C.
Noah Biggs, Scotland Neck, N. Q and Books furnish
R. R. Fleming, N, C. Fl application.
GREENVILLE
Horse Exchange.
For Horses ard
go to Dr. old stand, rear Hotel Ma-
con. I have just returned with a lull line of
from Richmond, at juices to suit
Call at once, to sec my stock before buying
elsewhere, it will pay
I have a Livery in connection and have both
turnouts and polite drivers.
E. C. WHITE, Manager.
For Buggies, or Norfolk Traps
I can save you cent. Nothing but first-
class vehicles sold guaranteed
A. STOCK
o be
Owing; to the death of of our firm
during the past year and in order to settle
his estate we find it necessary to close
out our entire stock of
and to close out as early as possible we have
marked everything right down to
FIRST COST.
such a stock at the low prices the goods
be sold you can get genuine gains,
C early if you want the benefit of these
bargains.
stock will be closed out as fast as
possible
c,





The King Clothier.
Handsome and Elegant
the best and most fashionable
products of the most
in that bear
the impress of style and
Your choice of our store-
at wholesale prices. Such
are to be found elsewhere
The King Clothier,
FRANK
THE REFLECTOR
Local Reflections
mom.
is grip we sure.
One-twelfth of the year is gone.
W bat seems Id he pride in some
people is m
Washington is to have a fair
and is rilling still.
Ii. bought another
bus. is one here.
A- is her
house on improved.
The firm of Co. hits dis-
solved See notice.
The Jewish at Tarboro
will dedicated on Wednesday, Feb.
3rd.
A phone has been placed in Moses
King's stall the Market House. It is
No. 81-
February will give us four each
every day in the week. No fives in it
Ibis time.
You can a man's character
pretty thoroughly by what he considers
laughable.
A girl without a beau is like a man
without a home. Both have not
to lay i heir cud-.
The Kinston Free Press I he
cl Mr. Noah
which occurred Wednesday.
Many a who is sighing a
band could get one if she would
little more time arranging her hair.
It is time year when reflection
from burning plant beds in the
rounding country can be seen at night.
The boys have been having much
sport this week black birds
over en Harrington place, just east
of town.
When a young man wants to appear
real devilish to his he be-
gins to talk about his collection of
steins aid loving cups.
Putting an ad in a single issue of a
paper and then withdrawing it is like
letting a life insurance policy lapse
premium bas been paid
It just seems impossible to keep warm
in this weather except in a small, close
room with a big, hot stove, and then
you almost freeze on one side while the
other is burning.
If you really wish to win the
of the average young woman tell her
something
She will tell all her girl friends that
you are
In looking over the file cf Tub
for
lo having them bound we find that
the copy tor May has been lost.
We would like to have two copies of
that date and will any one
them to us.
Bob Greene Co., Undertakers.
Funeral Directors and have
an advertisement in this issue. Mr.
Greene visited Philadelphia and
tuck a course in practical embalming and
equipped himself with necessary supplies
doing all kinds work in line.
All advertising is bound
together by the chains of continuity.
Your ad of yesterday adds an additional
influence to your ad of today, and your
ad of today lends an force to
your ad of tomorrow. ad forms
but a part of the chapter in
t he great serial of Stop-
ping i our advertising then is breaking
off right in the middle of the story,
which will surely weaken the influence
of all former Ad-
Telephone
Atkins till us the work of
extending the telephone line to Snow
Hill has commenced. It is very prob-
able that connection be made with
Hookerton as we hear the people of
that town want it.
One Naught Too Many.
The Journal reports a man
who hail visited county
saying met a farmer who netted
off acres of Some
thing wrong about this. In the
place there is not a man in Pitt county
who plants acres in tobacco, and in
the next place an acre la no money
to make on a tobacco crop. Perhaps
the Journal meant acres instead
of
Our Kind of Printing.
A business man in another town, for
whom the office turned
out some job printing, writes
ed the work yesterday and like it very
much. I like the paper the print,
was very executed. Kudos
ed find money order to pay the bill
Best wishes for the continued prosper
of the
One of our town business men, who
brought in large job yesterday, said
know where to get neat printing, so
came down to see
Coldest January Day.
Mr. Allen of Riverside Nor.
or who for several years past has
kept a record of the weather, taking the
each day at noon, sends
the Reflector the following record
of tho coldest days in January the
five years
18th and at m.
at m.
189313th at
at m.
at m.
The coldest day hive had in any
month years was Feb. 8th.
when the temperature at m.
FOLKS.
Thy Step Lively February
Weather.
U. W. King is quite sick.
J. S. Tunstall has been sick a few
Alfred Forbes and wife are both
sick.
B. Cherry, Jr., returned home
Friday evening.
W. II. Grimes returned from
Friday
F. G. James returned Friday evening
from Henderson.
B. K. n turned from Oxford
Wednesday evening.
J. F. Ki g returned from Richmond
Wednesday evening.
E. A. wife returned
day evening from Wilson.
Mi's Mamie Hooker to Ayden
Friday evening to visit
H. W. Whichard, railroad agent, and
Dr. K. Warren, of Whichard, were
in town
a W. and wile, of Norfolk,
arrived Friday lo v sit tie; lam
of F. G. James.
Mrs. While, of Hertford, who
has been visiting the lam White,
returned home today.
Miss Addie Johnson, of Q
came up lo visit
Mrs. C. P- tree.
A. has
on King's Wei some months,
Saturday morning for Carthage.
albs L. Lacy returned W ed,
evening South .
tor, V , she had b i t
d the marriage bf her r.
B. auto
of Christian church, preached in
Methodist In re Sunday night
N. II. left Sun-
day morning, having received a
gram announcing the illness of
his brother who has since did.
Johnson, who some years
been clerking C. T. left
for home in Sc-
Neck. spending a days there
he will go ti Baltimore lo take a course
in a business college.
ITEMS.
N. C. Jan. 1807.
a lot of are being
hauled hen now.
The farmers in this section are
paring beds say the
acreage ha somewhat decreased tit i
year.
I. R. Bell was in town last week.
J. I. Perkins this morning for
Mrs. W. H. Ross, who has been
right sick, is improving.
J. P. Fleming left last week for
school at Newport News.
T. h. Thomas, of Rocky Mount
spent several days here last week.
R. X. Keel spent Wednesday and
Thursday at Bethel.
J. C. Higgins, Meant, w
hero Wednesday.
Mrs. G. N. Warren g
her parents at th e last
days.
A large crowd attended services at
Oak Grove Sunday. Rev. J. L. Win-
field preached an able and instructive
sermon.
Miss Annie Baker, has been
teaching near here, left for her home
today. She has made many friends
during her stay here who regret to see
her leave.
Sylvester liming, Washington,
was here today.
W. II. was here
a short while this morning.
M N. C, Feb. 1st.
W. S. been sick with
several days.
Several people from this section at-
tended the Union meeting at Christian
Chapel Sue day.
J. G. Staton, of was here
Monday.
Glad to hear of the prospect of
connection here soon.
B. A. is seriously ill with
influenza complicated with pneumonia.
W, J. Washington, spent
Friday here.
Geo. W. Carter left Thursday for
his home in Windsor.
Capt. J. W. made a
trip to Washington Saturday.
Dr. W. K, Warren is preparing t
build a new office at an early date.
D. H. Scott, of Richmond, a very
clever drug drummer, was here last
week.
John E. Gurganus and Miss Maggie
were married last Wednesday
by J. H. J. P. We extend
congratulations.
Mr. Hodges, of chief
of the Johnson Lumber
Co., was here last week to inspect the
wrecked locomotive and and decided to
have it taken to the shops for
HELD FOB
Lee H, s Trial aid
to Reflect
Tarboro, N. C. Jan.
Lee, who is accused of murdering
William Stevens at Knight Station, a
few days ago, was given a preliminary
trial yesterday before Capt. Watson, J
P., and committed to jail without bail-
It is said that the murderer of Ste-
was tracked within a short dis-
of Lee's woodpile, and the tracks
a pp. an d to be about an inch or
shot tor than Lee's tight fining shoe
make. When Lee was arrested
he asked what was he arrested for. He
was carried to the dying bed of Stevens
and the latter asked why he shot
Ice replied that he m I do
the was sorry Steven
was shot.
Stevens also told his
; he saw Ice plainly from the flash
of the at the he was shot,
A fire alarm was n h re at
last night and had the
in a few The alarm
came from an Id stable in Third
No done,
About this
was alarm caused by the ex-
an oil stove in Hotel
There was but th
lire was extinguished damage
to the
charming place.
Spring , K- C Jan.
Reflector my lIe, six white and one.
License.
During last week Register of Deeds
licenses for seven
here I have received nothing
but The Daily Reflector. When
a poor dyspeptic has found a
place where he has only to drink
all the water he can and eat all
he want, be finds little interest
in reading- else than
home re vs. Did you t
this delightful ice
It seems like a home prepared
by for her
children, where mother ear can
administer own home
dies. On the south it is
tiled, or guarded, by a
range of hills,
in height and grandeur. he
only few feet from
the springs, flows sullen
Neuse, as if to guard
every cumbering
care In summer they are usu-
ally to that it is t.
address the proprietor be for.
home At bow-
Fred Haddock and Millie
John F. and Margaret
and Ruth Parker.
D. Seymour and Lizzie Hurt
L. Haddock.
A. L. and Annie Stocks.
Noah and Addie Carr.
he total number for the
Hi-mil of was of which
were whites and for
We Extend Thanks.
Fresh Carr Butter I
at S. M.
Apples cheap, cents a peck S.
M. Schultz.
Notice is hereby that
will be made to the
North Carolina at its present to
the Bank, at
, N. C. J. W.
CLOSE CALL.
Bug-y Co's-
a Narrow .
About o'clock Sunday afternoon
parties by the the
John Flanagan Baggy Co. saw sin
issuing from the building. The tire
alarm sounded and a while the
whole town was in the great
xi in mint. When tie door was
open fire was awn Minting
rapidly from floor to ceiling in one
end o the wood-working room.
The fireman and a large number of
were quickly on hand and the
fire was soon extinguished,
The buggies and most of the stock
and tools were hurriedly moved out to
a safe distance.
The origin of the Arc is a mystery.
one had been in the shop during
the day and there had been no fire in any
of the stoves since the day before.
was some damage to the build-
and also to the the latter be-
from hurried moving and from
all reaching probably There
was insurance the building but none
on the stock.
The discovery of the fire in its early
singes was fortunate, for made
headway to get beyond con-
of the firemen there would have
been a large and fur reaching blaze.
Roll of Honor.
For the first month of the public
school taught at School House,
by Tyson.
Forbes. Forbes,
Pearl Forbes, Neva Forbes, Annie-
Smith, Nancy Smith,
Maud
Sutton.
Sutton, Charlie
ton, Simon Allen
Alex Harris, Charlie Forbes and
lie Forbes.
It might be well to slate that no
is on the Honor Roll who was not
present both days of the
in
Is till tide of a pamphlet, published by
the Kali No. M
I, New N. Y. This
book is known to of our readers
loin its first edition, published a few
j ears ago. The second edition conking
many improvements.
Tin- conic, embody a
obtain d with lei at our
ever, is only one .
,. . n. Stations. Would
here this L ,, . . u
many
And ex fertilizers on the
I say to t not M mu,.,
Hie o. these as ill y production
water.-. I have made el a. certainly pay
in health, Very . to write a copy this
v is sent true.
ft I
the Ho
able to
meal
. . , , but
ii it tin
i. d tin- hie the
We had a good trade during the
still have a lull to select from
show you the latest in
Dress Goods, Shoes,
Notions. Hats,
AND GENTS FURNISHING
an
ii the
u if Mr J. Foil-
Uta
is me the dining W-ill
street is to tile
She watches regulates
ply
I was a little amused to
the only two who ever ii auk too
much, were
drank and the other
o'clock the
first day. o, no. c
boys away.
As to the wonderful reports
which you have heard to the
curative properties of the Seven
Springs, I can say, as the
other disciples said to Nathaniel
come see. Yours truly,
Z M
Work.
Hob Greene undertakers,
have placed one of their on
exhibition in the window II. C
Co's store. This t
which is a sample from their stock, is
the handsomest piece of in
line ever shown lure. It is of the
canopy lop pattern brocaded in
the upholstering being white silk.
at prices that arc way down. Come and gee us
and we will you m re ft
Mil than any house in Greenville
THAT
lac. ,,, , ,. u,,. ,
friend and u
I-. St-i key. To add lo sorrow of
this an o u. Hi ,
cents additional expenses
of Si to say the feed
which was lo
take this method extending our
sympathy to Mr. in his great
His is our gain.
sod the mule doth
sleep.
while Jim
in puce.
Many
The Public
Today County Commissioner
met to apportion the school fund
to the several district of the county.
They made a new district out of
lions of No. and
township, the new district to be known
as No. and also re-established dis-
No. in Swift Creek township.
This is ground hog day, and it the
saw his shadow he bad to
go in other part the world to
tied it. No sunshine in this quarter.
Mint Be
At a meeting in Jamaica the
following resolutions are reported to
have been That build
a new chapel. That we build the
new chapel out the materials the
old fur economy. That
ship in the old chapel till the new one is
Floral Guide, 1897.
For nearly half a this Cat-
of Flower and Vegetable Seeds,
Plants, Hull's, Grains, Potatoes,
etc, has come as regularly as spring
time. Here it is again lo remind us
that it's time to think about our gar.
dens. This issue contains halt dozen
full page half-tone illustration- of
Roses, Flowers, Carnations
and Tomatoes.
It seems full of the necessary
for either amateur or
Send lo cents to James Vick's
Sons, Rochester, N. Y., for a packet of
either Vick's Branching Aster, New
Japan Morning Glory or extra choice
Pansy end a copy of Vick's Floral
II you state where you saw Ibis
notice you will receive a package of
flower seeds free.
is no indication that y cat known
the value of money, simply because it
always carries its purrs with it.
The young couple who before mar-
thought they could live on love
are now living on corn bread and
The Light.
The who stands be-
fore the public in the full, legitimate
and dignified one is
proud or his has a right M be
proud it, is doing a lot of it, and
to More i.; and he is kind
of man that everybody wants to do
business just so as the
will he attracted by the candle
light, so long will trade swarm around
the advertising light of
They Don't His Course.
Daring the late contest had in
over the election of Senator, Col.
Skinner, who was to
almost any measure to secure the re.
election f was reported as
saying in on of the caucuses that he
had a latter
Co Chairman, J. A. Lang, of
sin that all the Populists of
Pitt fully endorsed his
coins-in
The inked Mr. Lang
about this and he says he wrote Col
Skinner Ml such letter. He did writ
a letter t bin it was
a and contained HO
as to what any
ill Skinner's course,
II. Harrington was in
Raleigh a days ago, the News
and Observer him as
Harrington, Pitt,
is In re and the in
county are disgusted with the action of
the hollers in supporting Hi
says th y condemn Harry Skinner most
mar-
can sell strictly first-class goods at such
low prices as
at cents a pound
Good Chewing Tobacco at cents
cents a
Salt and Sweet Snuff at cents a pound.
and everything else in the Grocery line
as the above articles. It is because w
buy goods tor the spot cash and soil them
for same kind of Come and see .
lead others try to follow.
ED. H.
FIVE
Or
UNDERTAKERS.
EMBALMERS.
We just received a now
and the nicest line of if
and in wood,
and cloth ever to
eon .
We are prepared to do
in all its forms-
Personal attention l i to
and bodies
to our care will receive
every mark of respect.
Our prices are lower ever.
We do not but
invite
We can be a any all
times the John Flanagan
Co's
BOB GREENE
X-R
I prove
1st, Greatest Merit
Scoured a peculiar
and Process
unknown to others which
naturally and actually produces
Greatest Cures
Shown by thousands of honest,
testimonials winch
naturally and actually produce
Greatest Sales
According to the statements
Of severest trial and test prove
In repaid lo Hood's Sarsaparilla
According to the statements
druggists all over the country.
In these three points Hood's
Sarsaparilla is peculiar to Itself.
Sarsaparilla
Is the Is the One True Blood Purifier.
to take
PHIS with
Arriving daily, come and sec them.
a i o O B B O a
P Q B
o H o
B, pa. a E Si p as B a. CO o -t B Cu o
LADIES
Your Attention
f AFT.
Lang
Sells
cheap
Lang
Sells
cheap.
The Ladies Palace
The Ladles could not do better than to call at
our store and sec the pretty line of
Dress Goods, Shoes
CAPES, NOTIONS
and everything to suit their taste. We make
a specialty good goods tor the ladies The
price h no object. Come and see mo.
RICKS TAFT.





W k BRASS SUNDIAL
V the
of Bare,
at la a alga nor a Han
Of a yea Bare Been and known.
a Id fare
ft Bee toe for and It-
hare
. only tn
wort mm.
that ware and
that lire In
wen lore
He, now then.
among
end Ton are,
world In rap
men at
mm roar
to. a
a at to and mar.
w of world only.
be doth all Ma
I be to harm
tore I
And doubt and an p at
will ever ray.
Beat
original has fir
for
probably
Km pastime with thorn is
than the of la.
it far the Indiana,
own petition in
possibility.
Swiss coaster was destined to a
tor Shorter supremacy when to
tarn of Hint
it got all Hint
in
f on a wooden framework
upon flat iron bars. And
. L. P. Child of York
the want by producing in the
of American
beat every rider in
of sight, whether native
r He rode it bond
on bis side, steering with one
foot swinging be-
after the method familiar on
of Montreal.
Owing to local prejudice and
it, bend position bad not
to till long
it had been well known
of
new a not so
an a. the long
t of Mr. ma
by c. which
made Cm
the
C E.
American, by winning the
beat at St. Merit;, sitting on
of the new clipper sleds, proved
the merits of the right
even when it was ridden
In be wrong way, and showed that
eta bard ice well as on the snow
mi the new machines
aM a great advance
and
late Archbishop Benson of
and Manning
need frequently at the
club and good
friends, thought
Benson not enough
policy. A correspondent of
archbishop, who was also a
of the cardinal, received from
Lambeth in a letter in
which the Anglican of
the Roman cardinal. not
mistaken in thinking that I highly
-regard his person and bis life and
value the goodness of Cardinal Man-
heart toward with more
the purpose. The
showed the letter at the
to Ordinal Manning, who read
with evident I,
he said, as he pat it down,
a great liking for dear
of -New York
Tribune.
Th of Hawaii.
One of the volcanoes in
hes a large of liquid
in its water or hollow. This
filing, boiling mas, locks
bottle to the eye,
wt the pieces of
the original rocks of very
size may be it has
cooled in along the
It resembles slag from some
The Art
A wise Hum in on to young
men advised learn the hard-
est lesson in the art of
being patient.
your duty and leave
to take care of and then you
will see the of the old prov-
comes to the man
that can You know, for in-
stance, how bard it i to learn a
subject. All ideas
the words are
We go on laboring end seem to
make no way. Now
nine students out of nine
out of ten that will always be ob-
the tenth man
on. He works harder end hard,
he lets his mind play around the
subject, ho lets the Ideas of that sub-
soak into his brain, he is deter-
mined that nothing can possibly re-
persistent effort, and one fine
day a great flood of light comes in
he suddenly sees all about it. His
work is easy, work is delightful.
Everybody of him, an
amazing amount of ability
young man No, it was not
ability, it was patient perseverance.
The man had Ml labor and
to wait.
A bat is or smoothed
by means of a which pol.
the whole surface finely and
smoothly with emery paper. For.
this process was done bf
band, workmen using pumice
tone for that purpose.
Training That
Jefferson has taken up the
cudgels against undue athletic train-
which ho says off more
people than it cure. The strati
system, forces the
heart to a teak far beyond its pow-
and a result
lapse of the life be-
fore the appointed Mr.
says that he met Lawrence
Barrett some years ago on a
corner in Boston, and Barrett said
he was waiting for a car to take
a gymnasium. the
matter with said
son. better
at
it will save you the.
there. York
The Origin
Tho was a stroll
la tho country a
pent, stiff with cold, lying on the
around. Ho compassionately took it
and warmed it in his bosom
serpent bad recovered, i
prophet, listen. I am now
going to bite
inquired
mod.
thy mine
and tries to stamp it
docs not thy too, make
perpetual war was
prophet's rejoinder. canst
thou, besides, so ungrateful and
so soon forget that I saved thy
is no such thing as
upon this replied
serpent, if I were now to spare
thee, thou another of thy
race would kill me. By Allah, I shall
bite
thou hast sworn by Allah,
will not to break
said prophet, holding hi
band to tho mouth.
bit him, but ho sucked the
wound with bis and spat tho
on ground. And on that
very spot there sprang up a
which combines within the
venom of tho serpent and con-
passion of tho pi Men call
of tobacco.
Occasionally one across per-
sons who are to intents and
poses utterly -j No
matter what their acts, they have a
plausible excuse, and w excuses
are exhausted they dismiss the
whole affair with a little or a
wave of tho hand and declare that
they don't know anything
about it, or that they have done all
they can, and that's nil there is to
Personal the
habits of accuracy, reliability, truth-
and well bred frankness are
among tho most important items in
the education of a child above all,
a feeling of accountability and the
disposition to accept whatever be-
longs to one's share of the
of York Ledger.
EDISON THE DREAMER.
AT
Row Urn Cot Rid of Borne
Some had referred to Edison
as Victor Hugo when he made bis
appearance as an operator in our
telegraph office in Boston, and it
was by that name we generally
spoke of him. Every device was
employed to thwart his soarings
after the infinite and his divings for
the unfathomable, as
them, and to get an amount of work
out of him that was equivalent to
the sum paid per diem for his
ices, and among them was that of
having him receive the press report
from Now York. He did not like
this, the work continuing steadily
from p. m. until a. end
him no time in which to
pursue bis studies.
Ono night about p. m. there
Came down an inquiry as to where
the press report was, and, going
to the desk where Edison was at
work. Night Manager Leighton was
horrified to find that there was
nothing ready to go up stain, for
the reason that E had copied
between 1,600 and words of
stock and other market reports in a
hand so small that ho had only filled
a third of a page.
Leighton laughed in spite of him-
self, and Tom,
Don't do that hastened to
cut tho copy up into minute
and have it prepared in a
more acceptable manner.
While this was occurring Edison
wont on receiving, and tho frequent
trips of the noisy dummy box, which
communicated with the
on tho gave evidence that
he was no longer his hand-
writing with ultimate view to
putting Lord's prayer on a
cent piece.
But all at once was a great
noise, and it was evident that Frees
Agent Wallace, most profane
man, was coming down the stairs,
swearing shouting as ho came.
Everybody grow excited except
son, who was perhaps dreaming of
the possibilities in. some of tho
realms of electrical in
which he has since won renown.
But we did not have wail
to know the cause of Walls it
Kicking open the door, he
to us, but be was speechless. The
last note of his voice the last
of a vocabulary of
U was famous through-
Oat the city was gone. Standing
there with bands of small,
white pages of paper, be could only
beckon. Leighton approached him
and tenderly took sh of pa-
per from him, to 13- Edison
had made the r . fro
his fir-1 to simply put-
ting one v rd . t. din t-
in r. He had hi
in this way pages
in a i.
He was relieved from duly on the
j ; and ; her cir-
while
Leighton
hi
back t- a i I i .-. admit-
ting of bis
low of his usual .,
J. .
costs cotton planters more
than five million dollars an-
This is an enormous
waste, and can be prevented.
Practical experiments at Ala-
Experiment Station show
conclusively that the use of
will prevent that dreaded plant
disease.
Ho, last
In late
To as, w. .
la too,
. la heart Si
Id but n
nay,
His quiet
For nil Baa dim
With want of only
What
hand
th.
Your in or this.
And trivial said
An of the ii. at.
You will bear Ban
us;
Ami. then
Of mid men,
Your from shall reach us
Al from
Rt if you, at lost.
Thai sea had passed
and
and never turn,
fr.-in tho
Even is
. sins
h away
As st Hie day.
we, a it not, by Hie light,
Cry. are -a
ever, near or
Life we
am bid
death la not to
A ti m
G from i life.
hand and
The word's u knell,
But y -r y
here,
a tho be
Could we Ii -r and
A. John U in
of a Man.
Ho Was a careful and thoughtful
man. In fact, it may bu that
he was an extremely careful and
thoughtful man.
Ho was resting comfortably in his
easy his resting on a
foot-rest when that
pencil needed sharpening. Any
Other man would have taken out his
and began work at but
be was too thoughtful for that, also
too careful.
He sighed, pot up out of his chair
and wont across the room for a lit-
paper basket that was
in the corner. Then ho re-
turned to his seat in the easy chair
and placed tho basket on tho floor
his logs.
His wife smiled approvingly, and
be felt proud of himself.
He opened his knife, loaned over
his and began work on the
is just easy to careful
be said us be de-
the first shaving from the
end of the pencil.
replied his -as she fol-
lowed the shaving
saw it go over his land
on the carpet behind
But why There are
who have not tried to sharpen a
oil over a t in mo-
of temporary insanity.
When be had finished, there were
three shavings in the basket, and
tho rest were on the floor.
That is usually the way it hap
Post.
President Wright, c of the
Georgia Slate Agricultural college
has this anecdote of At
tho close of the war General Harris
addressed the pupils of a
school in Atlanta. What shall I tell
thorn the north when g.
he said. A buy sitting the
front row to his feet and
cried, we are
is t . ,;,
THE WINDOW TOWARD
a window t -war wast
Where through long years OS ii
day
end friend I y a at
Whose brow, by
by h-
ray.
th worn Kill I of
meted of cold.
From elms the
And ti a s.
Of full bird told.
Dimly through
shrill cry
saw two fend faro-
How lint, n. to the pine's soft
In yonder vale where low hi r brave lie.
What made her face who can tell
Through of
Slave of r. be s t.
r household; without she
wooed
With of illy interlude.
That hope and
One bleak eve tho wind low and
tight it.
And shadow deepened through the
room;
Save that she they knew not when aha
died,
Bat the i d
window aha gained the land of bloom.
A. n. Hall ill New York observer.
CANINE FRIENDSHIPS.
Some Cartoon of and
Hinds
between
are often of a most singular
kind. Kai enough, dogs
ions among their own ml-
though tho largo share of
liberty they enjoy is tho cause of,
their contracting
A close I and
between doge horses
is apparently frequent than,
any similar relationship In-
of the Dogs,
however, are fond of queer company
and go out of their way in search
of it
The numerous m formed
between dogs and and even
poultry in general, are re- Diseases That Cause Their
It i-t not genera y
that the goose is a I'd of ex-
sagacity, and this mu. I
regard of fur feather may
proceed on an which
overrides i
of goose known as
is especially remarkable for
its strong dogs, Ono
which was re aid by a mastiff from
an attack by a fox showed
of its obligations and a
desire to return them which were
touching in their obvious feelings.
The goose entirely abandoned
society of its kind, roosted in the
dog's and followed it in its
daily wanderings over n- large
and through neighboring
dog fa Ding to fall ill,
tho goose would not leave him night
or day and would, to nil appear-
mice, hare had
pan of corn boon placed for it every
day near tho kenneL
Dogs and fowls a into
cable r Lions for much
lass apparent to than to
themselves. A hen and a retriever j
became so strongly attached that
the former laid her eggs and hatch-
ed her chickens in his kennel. On
the hen her nest
move from the thresh-
old to make room, while any j
tempt to touch tho eggs In her
was met by dis-
approbation, is also an in-
stance of u friendship which
gradually grew up between a tame
rook and a bulldog, tho dog never
appearing happier than when the
rook Was d back.
Motives of lead to
many apparently friend.
ships. Cats and e gs are
known to carry their young
m who friendship
sake or n i-. i maternal
love a. ; the duties
thus upon her. But still.
more ti those in
mothers,
ail and of
In the co districts of sooth-
tho present of a
in ti n
is a strong hint that he ought M
as
Victims to h Shunned by
Their
Mo.
I P.
P. P. last
Fall, for ins. My was com-
with the disease ; took
I short of P., and It soon
Spring I
and took
course, and I am now in
P. one of
tho beat blood on tho
market, for who need a g.-n-
tonic to up the
Improve I that it
has no say. Anyone who
are- to try P. P. P. Will not be
in therefore,
cheerfully it.
Mo.
and Scrofula cured by P.
P. P. surely
and without fail.
Mo.
Last I had a
scrofulous b which broke out on my
ankle. It grew rapidly, and soon ex-
tended from my ankle to knee. I
one bottle of your P. P. P.,
Great and
surprised at the The entire
healed at think have
taken almost, every medicine
mended for scrofula and catarrh, and
your P. P. P. is the best have
tried. It cannot be recommended too
highly for blood poison,
Yours very
W. p.
P. P. P. cures all blood akin
st. both in men women.
Rheumatism, which makes man's life
a hall be relieved
r. P. P. Rem-
It PERMANENT cure.
P. P. P. is the print and remedy
for advanced cases of catarrh. Stop-
of the nostrils and difficulty in
when lying P. P. P.
relieves at once.
P. P. P. cures blood in
its stages, old gores and
COBB
M--i Is a th. r-
about n i . in
this I to every .
still ii . i i . facts I erg
the of it, no fact
confound live to-
other in
theories but a and
ill among thorn
is e nit em
Canal
Tie an
The ion
y the ;, i I con-
I classes of words, of which
include the lore
dictionary, the most
ancient of any i in literary
history, was aged by
she, i . it C
Map It.
is rot about pure grit
winning
sank a fortune in grindstone
Detroit
A motorman's life la not a
While the self eon
duct or is tho coin in
pocket, j muling
the bell cord or blithely
names, the motor-
man i grinding on his
at the urn bis mind to its
utmost Ion his and
arms r i ; idle.
he's o to whenever
accident happens, without a
being to tho many
v i have been avoided
through alertness
Poston
E IN SPA t
V, i . i i I -1.
man fair
I the f t I . -i-
Tin- I
We l
ware in S glee
Au Bf a
dad a
Bib and with Una,
But r n ; e- not
res, I
the re-l hills -e v-l -e
By Hi., tearing holes In tho
I the I
ll . a.
But
from
throat far, from Tort.
The I ilia Ian .
that
HUM
On a r.-4
ill
acid
HI PAN
The modern
ard
cine the
common
ills of humanity.
to an iii handling
. , p a target,
and hit it In Hie cater every
My
my pocket of all the In en
and r i s
C an he Cured
; all Pa-
led lot
U, P
-i
,, .-. Ion, . , , .
.- no-
If i or
Oat I I duet II
co el HUB ,. .
. . O.
A. . W
II.
In
r;
f Mil
at a .
says an exchange,
not Sneer at the hardworking me-
for beneath that dust soiled
jacket may rest the spirit of true
The exchange is eminently
It is indeed wrong to pass
rough this world sneering at me-
A good, average, able-
bodied mechanic is a bad man to
sneer at. At almost any
ed moment he- is quite liable to
transfer some of the dust of his
jacket to tho broadcloth coat of tho
sneerer and jolt him severely if be
too hard at the mechanic. If
a boy or young man is
sneering at a mechanic, it would
be quite as well not to let a hard-
working mechanic catch him at it.
When tho boy wants to sneer real
and feels that he cent hold it
any longer, it would be far better,
instead of plunging right into the
midst of a of hardworking
to some lo-
have the I out all by
himself. It would look a deal
the l y v. i id look bet-
when he wont k to the bosom
I his
Io, boys, it is j gen-
. l nor . e to i- i-.
r i .
. ;
,. . i . in
tee of raw i-. . is eye,
e a with
. am i a, feel-
his lame back or the
gold filling out of hi teeth, which
a ed o . up
. i Ida i la
.- . t . i .; me-
.- in
,.; . j youth
i i
c. .-.
Favors I in
Ten
h Ban-
r ii
at.
-D
t. t
At It PATH h
the I he dig
i-i It a
ill-en e. and In order to I
mu I in
Cure I- i and
HI the eon
mead
bed v cf the
s in
. ; d i- a trip ho. It
em i i e, th t nil's
in-d will beat Idol
g on the
at two
1.1 i what produces ooh
results In curing; I
s i-husky Props Toledo.
Sold by
h.
r. B
Doll.
ii i .
ax
H.
st .
I'd toil's I net I
. y i i
. I I II I II t I
ho lb e
fill ,.;.
t . ,
run . N.
POULTRY
------A lino of-----
Family
I f
our,
Lard,
Coffee
Sugar
Mi
Bl
A. M
to
Ac
k. .
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mind
pr
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mid.
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11- I lb i- . VI i
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l M
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TASTE
-J
U IT
. i ii i a-1 r i t and i i i ii VI
T Pills
Cure All
Liver Ills.
Secret of Beauty
is health. Tho secret of health is
the power to digest and
a proper of food.
never be done when
the liver docs not act it's part.
D o you know th is
Liver Pills arc an
lute cure for side headache,
sour stomach, malaria,
torpid liver, piles,
jaundice, bilious fever, bilious-
and kindred diseases.
Liver Pills
ITo. Ho.
-oar,
C TONIC Rod
. II ye n.
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Kit
r. n. B
Tabula relief.
H p
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bad bream.
and Fencing
sold. work
prices reasonable.
mm
AT I H I ROM i INK
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r.
M r, Manager.
B Y.
Notice
day q i,. r.
A. of Conn of
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Dec.





A. BRASS SUNDIAL.
th-
of km hundred ;
it la never a nor a
an Men and known.
a Blimp in your face
. MM Joy and to team
hi tore
only to r
Am wow of men.
were crashed and L
. Hurt In
wore lore united,
. elite now then,
power among
fine, Writes to
V--, servant end stave Ton are,
In his
who at l.-wt
Pea- none may hi
awe never a
at at and mar.
aw of world only.
, he doth nil
-x
be ti harm its.
ton to
And and an away.
Aw faithful will
Academy.
T Beat Syria I .-
The original has for
remained for Cans-
deem probably
Una pastime with U hardly
than original menus of lo-
it provided the
in speed never
possibility. The
to n
tr Shorter when to
keen of racing
it. Man got all Hint
in way of
if girting on a wooden framework
flat iron bars. And
Ms. L. P. Child of New York
want by producing in
of
which beat every rider in
of sight, native
r Imported. He it lying bend
fin on his side, tearing one
foot swinging be-
, after method familiar on
lb of Montreal.
Owing to local prejudice and
it, bead position bad not
to till long
after rt had boon well known else-
where. eve-, of
a not so
an .; n. as the long
.- of Mr. ma-
by cf
was made CM and
easy than with the la
E.
by winning
at St. Moritz, sitting on
an of the new clipper sleds, proved
the merits of the right
even when it was ridden
an the wrong way, and showed that
en hard ice as well as on
the new
methods were a great advance
Manning
The late Archbishop Benson of
and Manning
need re frequently at the
club and were good
friends,
that was not lugged enough
in hit policy. A of
the who was also a
friend of the cardinal, received from
Lambeth palace in a letter in
which Anglican aid of
the Roman cardinal. are not
mistaken in that I highly
-regard his person and his life and
. the goodness of Cardinal Man-
heart toward with more
the purpose. The
showed the letter at the
to Manning, who read
ft with evident I,
said, m he put it down,
a great for my dear
tester of New York
The Lake of Hawaii.
One of the large volcanoes in
has a large like of liquid
in crater hollow. This
boiling
bottle p-la to aha
the pieces of
the original rocks of very
Size may he detected. Where it
in festoons along the
it resembles slag from some
mammoth i
The Art of
A wise man in an address to young
men advised to the hard-
est lesson in the art of
being patient. Ho
your duty and
to take care of itself and then you
will see the wisdom of the old prov-
comes to tho man
that can You know, for in-
stance, how hard it is to a
subject. AU tho ideas are
familiar, all words are
We go on seem to
make noway.
nine students out of nine
out of ten that will always be ob-
the tenth man
goes on. He works harder and hard-
he lets his mind play around the
object, he lets the Ideas of that sub-
soak into his brain, he is deter-
mined that nothing can possibly re-
persistent effort, and one fine
day a great flood of light comes in
be suddenly sees all about it. His
work is easy, his work is delightful.
Everybody says of him, an
amazing amount of ability that
man No, it was not
ability, it was patient perseverance.
man had learned labor and
to
The Origin of
Tho prophet M taking a stroll
In tho country a
pent, stiff with cold, lying on the
ground. He compassionately took it
up and warmed it in his bosom.
When tho bad recovered, ii
listen. I am now
going to bite
inquired
med.
mine
tries to stomp it
docs not thy race, too, make
perpetual war against was ,
the prophet's rejoinder. canst
besides, so ungrateful and I
so forget that I thy
is no such thing a .
rude this replied the
serpent, if I now to spare j
thee, either thou or another of thy
race would kill me. By Allah, I shall
bite
thou hast sworn by Allah, I
will not thee to break
said prophet, holding his
j hand to tho serpent's mouth. The.
I serpent bit him, but sucked the
wound with his lips and spat
on tho ground. And on that ;
very spot there sprang up a
which combines within itself ;
venom of tho serpent and con-
passion of tho prophet. Men call tills j
of tobacco.
Occasionally one comas par- ,
sons who are to nil intents and
poses utterly No
matter what their acts, they have a ;
plausible excuse, and when excuses
are exhausted they dismiss the
whole affair with a little butter or a
wave of the hand and declare that I
they don't know
about it, or that they have done nil
they can, and that's nil there is to
Personal responsibility and the
habits of accuracy, reliability, truth-
and well bred frankness are ,
among the most important items in
education of a all, I
a of accountability and the
disposition to accept whatever be-
longs to cue's share of t he
of York Ledger.
EDISON THE DREAMER.
AT
A hat is or smoothed
by means of a machine which pol
the whole surface finely and
smoothly with emery paper. For-
this process was done by
workmen pumice
for that purpose.
Training That
Joseph Jefferson has taken up the
cudgels against undue athletic train-
which he says off more
people than it The strain
the system, the
heart to a tank far beyond its pow-
and as a result is a col-
lapse of life machinery be-
fore the appointed Mr.
says that he met Lawrence
Barrett some years ago on a street
corner in Boston, and Barrett said
he was waiting for a car to take
him to a gymnasium. the
matter with said
son. exercise,
st at die
it
there, York
Mo. n
In this hour yoU
To we to
dying, too,
Ind heart to heart
Id but u name for death.
tag ray,
i today
quiet stairs,
Tho lonely wan;
Par all tho house and dim
With want only
What household shall stand
your hand
Has toasted tin nil W shall
Your help in that or I his,
treasure even trivial words yon said
As memories of the ii,
will bear thus
us;
And. writing then
Of r lands and men,
Your from afar shall here
As from another
as if you, at last.
sea had passed
urn
and never turn,
And, of silence lone,
called tho unknown.
Even death is nothing more
Than of door
Through men pan
As Into day,
And who are It not, by tho light,
Cry, era lost
Thu- ever, near or far,
but
m we bid
death la to die,
As you, departing, f- ., daily rife,
hence life to life.
hands, and
The word's a
But r by year,
Ufa re a.-, here,
nor tho dart anon be
Could we hut hear
A. St. John in
Row He Cot Rid or Some Telegraphic
Drudgery.
Some one had to Edison
as Victor Hugo when he made his
appearance as an operator in our
telegraph office in Boston, and it i
was by that name generally
poke of him. Every device was
employed to thwart his soarings
after the infinite and his divings for
the unfathomable, as regarded
them, and to get an amount of work j
out of him that was equivalent to
the sum paid per diem for his
ices, and among them was that of
having him receive tho press report
from Now York. He did not like
this, work continuing steadily
from p. m. until u. m.,
leaving him no in which to
pursue bis
One night about p. in. there
came down an inquiry as to where
the press report was, and, on going
to the desk where Edison was at
work. Night Manager Leighton
horrified to find that there was
nothing ready to go up stain, for
the reason that hail copied
between 1,500 and words of
stock and market reports in B
hand so small that ho had only tilled
a third of a
Leighton laughed in spite of him-
self, and Tom.
Don't do that hastened to
cut tho copy up into minute
and have ii prepared in a
more acceptable manner.
this Edison
went on and tho frequent
trips of the noisy dummy box, which
with
on the gave that
he was no linger his hand-
writing with view to
putting the Lord's prayer on a S
cent piece.
But all at there was a great
noise, and it was evident that Press
Agent Wallace, most profane
man, was coming down the stairs,
and as he came.
Everybody grew except Edi-
son, who was perhaps dreaming of
the possibilities in some of the
realms of electrical endeavor in
which be baa won renown.
But we did not have long to wail
to know the cause of vi
Kicking open the door, appeal
to us, but he was
last note of bis voice and the last
remnant of a vocabulary of
which was famous through-
out the city was gone. Standing
with both hands foil of small,
white pages of paper, be could only
beckon. Leighton approached him
and tenderly I ;. I ;. h I of pa
per him, I i I
had made r sic i a from
his first styli of copy to simply put-
ting one v i .; each
in the Be bad
in this way p hundred pages
in a .
He as i ; i duty on
press v,
h; If Wallace
back Ion i n . . .
ting of use hi and
Bow of his usual
i. ; El,
of a
Ho was a and thoughtful
man. In fact, it may said that
he was an extremely careful and
thoughtful man.
Ho was resting comfortably in his
easy chair with bis feet resting on a
foot-rest when ho discovered that his
pencil needed sharpening. Any
Other man would have taken out bis
knife and begun work at once, but
be was too thoughtful for that, also
too
He sighed, got up out of his
and wont across tho room for a lit-
basket that was
standing in Then ho re-
turned to his seat in the easy chair
and placed the basket on tho floor
bis logs.
His wife smiled approvingly, and
he felt proud of himself.
He opened his knife, loaned over
his and began work on
pencil.
is just as easy to careful
and be said as he do-
tho first shaving from
end of the pencil.
replied his -as she fol-
lowed the shaving b nor eye mid
saw it. bis land
on the carpet behind bun.
But why There few
who have not tried to sharpen a
over a snail t in some mo-
of temporary insanity.
When be had finished, wore
three shavings the and
tho rest were on floor.
That is usually tho way it
Post.
President colored, of the
Georgia State Agricultural college
bas Ibis anecdote told of At
the dose war Genera Harris
addressed the pupils of a
school in Atlanta shall I tell
thorn in north when i go
he said. A boy sitting the
row jumped to his feet and
cried,
Tis i I w
THE WINDOW TOWARD .-at.
I know a window looking l the weal
Where through j i .-i on eon
day
Stranger end friend a sweet were
Meant,
Whose brow, no by t ace
lighted by name
ray.
O'er tho worn like of
flame
Th noted gold.
From the inch the-
And the air, lint i tie
Of oW told.
Dimly at war's
shrill cry
She Haw two last d fund
well-
Flow to the sigh
In yonder vale where low 1- r
What made her face who can tell
of each dire
Slave of r I
her without she
wooed
Kith of interlude.
That hope and divine
One bleak Marsh eve wind low and
And shadow through the
room;
Save that she know when she
died.
But raw the
Her uh d bind of bloom.
A. H. Hall In York
CANINE FRIENDSHIPS.
Some of and
often of n most singular
kind. enough, dogs
friends and
ions among their own species,
though tho largo share of personal
liberty they enjoy is th-- cause of
their contracting inti-
A close i and
between dogs horses
is apparently frequent than
any similar relationship b; tween in-
of the same Dogs,
however, fond of queer Dampens
and go out of their way in search
of it,
Th numerous friendships formed
between dogs and geese, and even
poultry in general, quite re-
markable. It is not generally
that the goose is a of ex-
sagacity, and this mu.
regard of fur and feather may
proceed OB an understanding which
overrides th i distinctions of
Tho species of goose as
is especially remarkable for
its strong dogs. One
which was r by a mastiff from
an attack y a fox showed a con-
of its obligations and a
desire to them which were
touching in their obvious feelings.
The goose entirely abandoned the
society of its kind, roosted in tho
kennel and followed it in its
daily wanderings over a large farm
and through the neighboring
dig to fall ill,
tho goose would not lam night
or day and would, to all appear-
have been starved had not a
pan of corn been placed for it every
day near kennel.
Dogs and fowls enter into
cable r ions for nations much
lass apparent to onlookers than to
them.; Ives. A and n
became so strongly attached that
the former laid her and hatch-
ed her chickens in his kennel. On
tho hen leaving or entering her nest
the dog move from tho thresh-
old to make room, while any
tempt to touch tho eggs in her
was met by his dis-
approbation. is also an in-
stance of a friendship which
gradually grew up between a tame
rook and a bulldog, tho dog never
appearing happier when the
rook was seated on back.
Motives f lead to
many apparently perverted friend-
ships. Cats and j arc
to carry their young to a
mother, vi. for friendship's
sake or from o i I maternal
love a. s the tonal duties
thus imposed upon But still
more rem i are those oases in
which mothers,
and nit-
the districts of south-
England t present of a
l ti n to an unmarried
a that he ought
; . soon as
Diseases That Cause Their
Victims to be Shunned by
Their
Man is a ins-, th or;
loving animal, i .
about a ii i Ties it,
world ;.
still it i o bare
; the bust of it, because no fact can
another-. They to-
in
d and
and mortality am
is
Star
by imperial government con-
31-1 of words, of which
include the Bore
This famous dictionary, tho
ancient of any in literary
history, was arr by
she, who lived i t B C.
A POSTED
A purple I
. oh, i,
from yo r lay r
I in the . I
The ecru noon bang n trot.
We a by i-.-
You In
And reading I i edge of a
And I WM a nut,
end blue.
But tr a not
long.
And you. I took
By the red MB
By the tree, tearing In tho
I swore the red world I would
your love, He and
But away from my vowing I
And far, far from yon.
color I wore with
that
And now HUM
On a and Pad
alt on eh of an
And hold ea ,;
l-.-
RIP-AN
The modern stand-
ard Family
cine Cures the
common
ills of
Mo.
I taking V.
P. P. lest
for Erysipelas. My face wag com-
covered with the disease ; I took
course of I. it
This Sprint became
debilitated and took an-
other course, and I am now in
condition. I consider I. P. one of
the beat blood preparations on
market,, for those a pen-
em tonic to build tip the system and
the appetite I consider that it
haft no Will nay, anyone who
to try I. P, will not ho
in its and therefore,
recommend it,
ARTHUR WOOD,
Mo.
and cured by P.
V. P. surely
and without fail.
Mo.
I bad a
sore which broke on my
ankle. It grew rapidly, and soon ex-
tended from my tinkle to knee. I
got one bottle of your I. P. P.,
man's Great. Remedy, and agree-
ably surprise, at the result.
at once. I think have
taken almost every medicine
mended for and catarrh, end
your P. P. P. is the best have ever
tried. It cannot be recommended too
highly for blood
Yours very truly,
W. P. HUNTER.
P. P. P. cures ail blood and akin dis-
ease, both in men and women.
Rheumatism, which makes man's life
a hell be relieved
P, P. P., Great Rem-
makes h PERMANENT cure.
P. P. P. is great and only remedy
for advanced of catarrh. Stop-
of the nostrils and difficulty in
area thine; when lying down, P. P.
relieves at once,
P. P. I, cures in nil
its various and
BROS.,
i-k, Ca.
It.
is rot about grit
winning
sank a fortune a grindstone
Free Press.
Poor
life is not a
one. While satisfied con
doctor is chinking tho coin in bis
pocket,
bell cord or blithely
street names, motor-
man is mil grinding his life
at , his mind strung to its
it Ion, and his hands and
arms never a t idle. Yet
he's then e to Warned
an accident without a
being given to tho many
calamities have avoided
his
wife is an export In handling
r a
and hit it In the center
My
pockets of all In
and never a
Free en
Orr U. X. .
Wart t- . . .
Seed draw t or ; la
We or a-t,
to
A V I .
of o. ft.
free. A
P. Or r. , D.
w I-
In y c
Catarrh C an be Cured
i each the of the tin
iv b Mood or
in order to cure i
yon take remedies
Ca-arm Cure U f-ken i
direct -0 the
Cure no t i wok
it bed V of the
st in fer
year-. ; d a km. It
b -f t known,;
the best Idol r.
on the
Ti perfect combination m the two
i what on-
results ill Bend
for If Tee.
s Props Toledo.
h.
. -i
; t
n s h are tie
e e ill-Hi
el it. it, 1- ate i y . s-
I ma, ; . many tun-
I F e II are e II V Of
II ; link I lie it
pi J l I I. I
i. . . in e . Y i
.- i-
et I I . . ., t ThUS II
I. i ill i s .
in- s b , pi p-l
. o an I Ii -t t.
. f w . I
ti-- k- i
In, lie III hi a . I. s
y i b
en e ii me l its.
-b ., d r. ii
a in . It In e
-r-
Hie Te-
r n .
at. v
f-
Oil i
IX
H,
v fl n
III
------A line of------
Family
Mi
Wilson
Bl
our
Fl
Meat,
ill . N.
ST .
Tiled ford's I
pare y I-1
I- I- fl
i-
cc ;
I V
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tr you fair
ii-
Lard,
Coffee
Sugar
. M.
A. l
O M
Ii
I III U Is i
I n i.- .
Li
ft
i-.-
. .
costs cotton planters more
than five million dollars an-
This is an enormous
waste, and can be prevented.
Practical experiments at Ala-
Experiment Station show
conclusively that the use of
Will prevent that dreaded plant
disease.
aw w turn, f a
at a Mechanic.
fays an exchange,
not sneer hardworking me-
for beneath that dust soiled
jacket map nest the spirit of true
The exchange i.-s eminently
It is indeed wrong to
this world sneering at 1110-
A good, average, able-
bodied mechanic is n bad man to
sneer at. At almost any
ed moment he- is liable to
transfer some of the dust of his
jacket to the coat of tho
and jolt him severely if he
sneers too hard the mechanic. If
a boy or young man is
sneering at a mechanic, it would
be quite as well not to let a hard-
working mechanic catch him at it.
When the boy wants to sneer real
hard and feels that he can't hold it
any longer, it would be far better,
instead of plunging right into the
midst of of hardworking
to t some
and have the i r out all by
himself. It would look a great deal
and Id look
t. bosom
illy.
boys, it is t elite, gen-
I . e to
i H h net
toot . a j
lying
. I . . is eye,
r., ;. .
a of am a, feel-
his me back or
gold ; of bi which
be hap, lied to cum-. up
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d n fl K
. S. NOV.
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AL EN It.- .
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A T W
u R
A. f M T
A e
el.
in
mu
f. i-
i t- f
S.
.- i ii . n r .-. , ; Hi
T Pills
Cure All
Liver Ills.
j Secret of Beauty
is health. The secret is
power to digest and
a proper of food,
can never be when
the liver docs not act it's part.
this
s Liver Pills are an
lute cure for sick headache,
sour stomach, malaria,
constipation, torpid liver, piles,
jaundice, bilious fever, bilious-
and kindred diseases.
Liver
M.
C. M.
IN------
t. tans Tabula fives relief.
.-.
ft
and Fencing
sold,
price
OLD ABLE.
I. . . a I. ft Li
All i
mi-
i , I .
,.,. lid n-
in
,,, . , m., . I. I
r- f. Gin
an . . m i
in 11-.
O.
am
ere
Ai I
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v.
L-i
C.
Ml
if
J Use
v Ore
stall
1-
at a. M
leave at A. M.
; ii- a . v. smut-
.- hi are to Main-
mi ; r River.
v III .
line it Washington
.- s for Norfolk, ore,
phis N
heir
via lid
Vie
ll-y . Nor
i k lit tea HI
. ,
. ill.
.
.
a ; a. m
Sunday.
in .-in Branch
. .
I a . . and 1.40 p,
. . in., n-1 mill
. I in., . m. in.
.
. . .
v, ll
oil
II
III. Daily ex-
. .
xi
M;
p.
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C.
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a. Re.
nil.- cat -l ii a. in.,
it.
on bi Florence R
I.
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in,
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mi
I .
-OX. A gem,
J.
-v V
SAL
h leave
in. p. lie
l I.
. connection
. all rail via
K k,
I fare . i; for
n Norfolk,
M. r m -ii
Y. Dearer.
v in ii
. by n of Tin
made la Per
n . . ; in- M.
Notice
lag day t m d, , k.
A. Clerk of of
I u f
-1 --lie I u-- . deep wed.
Ii II- I tO .-
elate to
me
, I. Perkin on or In fore the ft h . .- , t-r
P. in. I. a-. n be plead In bar
v ii- a I o
f. .- the lo-ii i . i ire re -1 d to
In lie. ii i-. p ,.
en Hie
. Hi
J. II.
f ;.
P. arum, I.
I net la fl
I'd in n in trust i.
-i I, i e
i- I I roll
lb. mi de m Ii
, . e Regis . f Pitt
an -1 -i-i ii in i.-
nth e-.-e at f liner. lee
iii of t. the Kat.
. . h, f K III. em L-t-i el N in In
.-k eve-, he an e of . ,
S it a the north, tin k s
K. on k-
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, a Is
ii-d
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. ii
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O I H
and
I paR re
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f fl m to
M Aft. FOB FIR,
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. in J . pi
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. LO-St-
y,
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it i.
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and
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Dec.


Title
Eastern reflector, 3 February 1897
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
February 03, 1897
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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